[0001] The present invention relates to reclosable plastic bags and to the closures employed
on such bags. More particularly, the invention relates to the variety of closure employing
interlocking longitudinally-extending male and female rib- and groove-type profiles
wherein the male profile is flanked on either side by a pair of ribs.
[0002] In this particular variety of closure, a first rib member is disposed on one side
of the male rib-type profile, and a second rib member is disposed on the other side
of the male profile. Both the first and second rib members are designed to extend
in a generally parallel, spaced relation to the male profile over the width of the
bag's opening. The rib members are added to stiffen the area of the bag film around
the male profile and to thereby help the user to align and engage the male and female
profiles. Additionally, the ribs are believed to better distribute the closing force
exerted by the user over a greater area of the bag film, thus making the user feel
as though the male and female profiles are easier to engage.
[0003] Closures of the type described in the preceding paragraph are made integrally with
the extrusion of the underlying bag film web, or the bag film web can be formed separately
and the elements of the closure later formed and applied to the bag film web.
[0004] The ribs which have been employed to date with rib- and groove-type closures have
conventionally been triangular in shape, although ribs having a circular cross-section
are suggested in the context of a particular method of making the bag film web and
closure elements separately, see United States Patent No. 4,741,789 to Zieke et al.,
column 6, lines 43-52.
[0005] One problem experienced on occasion with conventional triangular ribs is that for
thin bag film webs and small closure elements and ribs and/or for ribs made from low
melt index materials, the ribs tend to fracture and become discontinuous along their
length as they are drawn down onto a casting roll, for example. This problem diminishes
the effectiveness of the ribs in performing the functions for which they were intended.
[0006] The present invention solves this problem, and realizes certain other benefits to
be described subsequently, by providing a profile and adjacent rib-type closure element
having a modified cross-section for the ribs. In this modified cross-section, the
ribs have a conventional generally triangular base which is surmounted by a bulbous
portion. The bulbous portion provides additional polymer at the tip of a rib which
can be employed in keeping the rib continuous over its length. Fracturing is prevented
on additional processing, while still enabling the manufacture of closure elements
of the desired size and of the desired materials.
[0007] Figure 1 is a cross-sectional view of a preferred embodiment of the modified profile
and adjacent rib-type closure element of the present invention.
[0008] Figure 2 is a fragmentary cross-sectional view in the area of the end of the closure
of a reclosable plastic bag made with the closure element of Figure 1.
[0009] Figure 3 is a cross-sectional view of an alternate, more preferred embodiment of
the closure element of the present invention.
[0010] Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to Figure 1, a preferred embodiment
of the modified profile and adjacent rib-type closure of the present invention is
illustrated.
[0011] The modified profile and adjacent rib-type closure 10 in Figure 1 comprises a conventional
longitudinally extending male rib-type profile 12 and adjacent longitudinally extending
ribs 14. The male rib-type profile 12 comprises a stem 16 and a generally arrowhead-shaped
head 18, with the head 18 defining hooks 20 for interlocking with the hooks of a corresponding
female groove-type profile (not shown) in a conventional manner.
[0012] The ribs 14 have a modified cross-section in accordance with the present invention,
and comprise a lower generally triangularly-shaped portion 22 with an upper bulbous
portion 24 defined generally at an apex of the triangularly-shaped portion 22. In
the embodiment of Figure 1, the bulbous portion is generally circular in cross-section
so that the center of the bulbous portion 24 is placed generally along the centerline
of the lower triangularly-shaped portion 22, with the lower portion 22 in turn having
the form generally of an isosceles triangle. The axis or centerline of the portion
22 essentially parallels the corresponding axis or centerline of the profile 12. The
resulting ribs 14 have the appearance of a keyhole, and can be thought of in other
terms as resulting from the superimposition of a circle on an isosceles triangle at
an apex thereof or along the centerline thereof.
[0013] The embodiment of Figure 1 can be made simply by drilling in a profile plate of a
conventional profile and adjacent rib-type closure element a hole of a selected radius
from the apex of each triangularly-shaped rib or from a point generally along the
center line of such rib.
[0014] The bulbous portion 24 as previously noted is designed to place greater amounts of
polymer at the end or tip of a rib 14, and to prevent fracturing of the type described
above by virtue of the added polymer. In designing the ribs 14, however, to accomplish
this end, there are several items to consider.
[0015] One such item concerns the width of the actual profile plate opening (not shown)
for producing the ribs 14 at the locations suggested by d₁ and d₂ in Figure 1. The
width of the profile plate opening corresponding to the intersection of the lower
triangular portion 22 and bulbous portion 24 of a rib 14 is to be understood as being
given by d₁, while the width of the actual profile plate at the base of the lower
portion 22 is understood as being given by d₂.
[0016] If the profile plate is cut so that d₁ is made too small relative to d₂, then polymer
for the ribs 14 tends not to flow into the part of the profile plate corresponding
to the bulbous portion 24. The resulting rib may have a more conventional generally
triangularly-shaped cross-section, or the upper bulbous portion 24 may be too small
to prevent fracturing over the entire length of the rib 14 and to achieve a secondary
sealing benefit to be described in greater detail below.
[0017] If d₁ is on the other hand made too large relative to d₂, then the bulbous portion
24 can become too large relative to the lower portion 22 supporting it. This also
is an undesirable result, for reasons which will be explained subsequently. The proper
dimensions d₁ and d₂ in the profile plate opening for a rib 14 will achieve for a
particular material of manufacture a suitably but not overly augmented tip of a rib
14.
[0018] As a second consideration, it is also important in moving from a conventional male
closure element to the type of closure element shown in Figures 1-3 that the modified
ribs 14 and profile 12 be sized so that the ribs 14 do not fill or are not formed
preferentially in the profile plate over the profile 12, and vice-versa. Some experimentation
may be required in this regard for different configurations and resins, so that the
ribs 14 preferably are made only slightly taller than the profile 12 and so that the
ribs 14 and profile 12 may generally fulfill their customary roles in the closure
of a bag. This experimentation is well within the abilities of one versed in the art
of making the conventional profile and adjacent rib-type closure elements, however,
and essentially involves a balancing of the pressure drops involved in filling out
or forming the ribs 14 and profile 12 through a profile plate.
[0019] A second benefit of the modified construction of the ribs 14 of the present invention
has already been alluded to and is illustrated in Figure 2, in that the modified ribs
14 can act as a secondary sealing mechanism against leaks through the end of the closure
of a bag in which the modified ribs 14 are employed.
[0020] Referring now to Figure 2, opposed sidewall portions 26 and 28 of the bag carry a
female groove-type profile 30 and the modified male closure element 10, respectively.
As the male and female profiles 12 and 30 are interlocked and the sidewall portions
26 and 28 clamped or pressed together for sealing, the bulbous portions 24 of the
ribs 14 contact the sidewall portion 26. The portions 24 as a result of this contact
are preferably urged toward the base 32 of the female profile 30 and toward something
of an interlocking engagement with the base 32 of the female profile 30, such that
materials must circumvent the portions 24 as well as the interlocking engagement of
the male and female profiles 12 and 30 to move through the sideweld from the interior
of the bag to its exterior.
[0021] In practical terms, the presence of the bulbous portions 24 at the ends or tips of
ribs 14 helps to fill and to restrict the space defined between the ribs of one closure
element and a second closure element through which leaking materials might otherwise
travel.
[0022] The likelihood of the bulbous portions 24 of the ribs 14 being urged inwardly toward
the base 32 of the female profile 30, rather than outwardly and away from the base
32, is believed to be at least in part a function of the method employed for creating
a side-weld between the sidewall portions 26 and 28. Where grooves are provided on
clamping members for receiving the male element 10 in the manner and in the hot-wire
sealing methods described in commonly-assigned United States Patent No. 5,012,561,
for example, it is thought that generally both of the bulbous portions 24 will be
urged inwardly as in Figure 2. Where hot-knife sealing rather than hot-wire sealing
is employed, however, usually one of the bulbous portions 24 will be pushed inwardly
as intended, while the other portion 24 is as likely to be urged outwardly away from
the female profile 30 as inwardly.
[0023] For this reason, and particularly where hot-knife sealing is to be employed, the
embodiment of the modified male closure element 10 which is depicted in Figure 3 is
generally more preferred. In this more preferred embodiment, the bulbous portions
24 are encouraged or predisposed to turn inwardly toward the base 32 of the female
profile 30 responsive to contact with the sidewall portion 26 rather than away from
the base 32 of the profile 30.
[0024] In Figure 3, the bulbous portions 24 atop the generally triangularly-shaped lower
portions 22 can be considered generally circular in cross-section, but are displaced
inwardly toward the male profile 12 so that their center lies on the inward side of
the centerline of the lower triangularly-shaped portions 22 of ribs 14. The ribs 14
in this embodiment can be envisioned as resulting again from the superimposition of
a circle on an isosceles triangle, but in this embodiment the circle is centered on
the inward side of the centerline of the triangle as opposed to along the centerline
generally or at the apex of the triangle. Displacing the bulbous portions 24 of ribs
14 in this fashion, it will be seen, encourages the portions 24 to continue to turn
inwardly toward the base 32 of the female profile 30 when compressed against the sidewall
portion 26.
[0025] To make this sort of predisposition effective, an adequate width d₁ must be provided
of the triangularly shaped lower portion 22 of a rib 14 at the commencement of the
bulbous portion 24. The reader of skill in this respect will understand that if the
portion 22 is too flimsy immediately adjacent the portion 24, then when the portion
24 contacts the sidewall 26 the portion 24 may be diverted away from rather than toward
the base 32 of the profile 30, notwithstanding any predisposition to the contrary
resulting from offsetting the portion 24 inwardly toward the rib profile 12. And where
the ribs 14 are constructed according to Figure 1, if the lower portion 22 is too
narrow at its intersection with the bulbous portion 24, then the response of the ribs
14 on sealing by any method may not be predictable or controllable for achieving the
secondary sealing characteristics described in the preceding paragraphs.
[0026] While preferred embodiments of the modified profile and adjacent rib-type closure
members of the present invention have been described herein, it will be appreciated
that the principle of the present invention may be applied with similar advantage
to other embodiments of profile and adjacent rib-type closure members, as well as
to other types of closure members generally without departing in scope or spirit from
the present invention.
[0027] For example, the concept of adding a bulbous upper portion to a conventional triangularly-shaped
rib structure may be applied to other rib structures of a more general tapering quality
wherein fracturing is of concern or where a secondary sealing capacity might be obtained
by such a modification. Similarly, some commercially available reclosable plastic
bags, such as those currently sold by Reynolds Metals Company under its "Sure-Seal"
mark, include within a closure element members of a generally triangular or generally
tapering quality which could also be modified in the manner suggested herein for ribs.
[0028] Any of the processes, for example, described in U.S. Patent Nos. 3,340,116; 4,263,079;
4,295,919; 4,396,449; and 4,764,977 can be used to produce the closure member of the
present invention.
1. A closure member for a reclosable plastic bag, comprising:
a longitudinally-extending profile interlockable with an opposing longitudinally-extending
profile of a second closure member; and
at least one first longitudinally-extending rib located adjacent and generally
parallel to at least one profile on at least one side of the profile, the rib being
characterized in cross-section by a lower generally triangularly-shaped portion and
by an upper bulbous portion defined generally at an apex of the lower generally triangularly
shaped portion.
2. A closure member as defined in Claim 1, further comprising at least one second longitudinally-extending
rib located adjacent and generally parallel to at least one profile on a side of the
profile which is opposite the first rib, said second rib also being characterized
in cross-section by a lower generally triangularly-shaped portion and by an upper
bulbous portion defined generally at an apex of the lower generally triangularly shaped
portion.
3. A closure member as defined in Claim 1, wherein the lower generally triangularly-shaped
portion and the upper bulbous portion of the rib give the appearance of an isosceles
triangle having a circle superimposed upon the triangle and centered along the centerline
of the triangle.
4. A closure member as defined in Claim 1, wherein the lower generally triangularly-shaped
portion and the upper bulbous portion of the rib give the appearance of an isosceles
triangle having a circle superimposed upon the triangle, with the circle being centered
inwardly of the centerline of the triangle and offset toward the profile.
5. A closure member as defined in Claim 2, wherein the lower generally triangularly-shaped
portions and the upper bulbous portions of each of the first and second ribs give
the appearance of an isosceles triangle having a circle superimposed upon the triangle
and centered along the centerline of the triangle.
6. A closure member as defined in Claim 2, wherein the lower generally triangularly-shaped
portions and the upper bulbous portions of each of the first and second ribs give
the appearance of an isosceles triangle having a circle superimposed upon the triangle,
with the circle being centered inwardly of the centerline of the triangle and offset
toward the profile.
7. A reclosable plastic bag comprising a closure member as defined in Claims 1, 2, 3,
4, 5 or 6.
8. A process for preparing a closure member for a reclosable plastic bag comprising forming:
a longitudinally-extending profile interlockable with an opposing longitudinally-extending
profile of a second closure member; and
at least one first longitudinally-extending rib located adjacent and generally
parallel to at least one profile on at least one side of the profile, the rib being
characterized in cross-section by a lower generally triangularly-shaped portion and
by an upper bulbous portion defined generally at an apex of the lower generally triangularly
shaped portion.
9. The process of Claim 8 wherein the rib and profile is extruded integrally with or
post applied onto a thermoplastic web.